1.Before he died, Abraham Lincoln had a “life mask” made of his face. This is what it looked like:

Print Collector / The Print Collector/Heritage Images

This one is from 1860, before he became President.

2.This is the last meal Richard Nixon ate in the White House before he resigned. Pineapple, cottage cheese, and a glass of milk:

A silver tray on a table holds a glass of milk and a plate with applesauce topped with cottage cheese, alongside a fork and a napkin

Tango Images / Alamy Stock Photo

Pineapple, cottage cheese, and a glass of milk.

3.Before it became that iconic sign all us sign-heads know and love, the Hollywood sign read “Hollywoodland”:

Driving on a winding road towards the original Hollywoodland sign on a hillside, featuring vintage cars from the early 20th century

/ Alamy Stock Photo

“LAND” was removed in 1949.

4.This is what Mount Saint Helens looked like before and after its 1980 eruption:

Two images of a snow-covered mountain: the top with a calm lake, the bottom showing the mountain smoking after an eruption

Science History Images / Alamy Stock Photo

A bit different.

5.These are the contestants for the 1924 Miss America pageant:

Vintage group photo of performers in elaborate headpieces and ornate, theatrical costumes, posing on a wooden stage

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

The competition started in 1921.

6.This is a picture of the spectators, including alleged mobsters, covering their faces with hats to avoid recognition during Al Capone’s trial in October 1931:

People seated in a courtroom, covering their faces with hats, likely avoiding being seen or photographed

Ullstein Bild Dtl. / ullstein bild via Getty Images

Poor form by the guy in the front row to the right. You hate to see it.

7.This is what a typical children’s playground looked like in 1908:

Vintage photo of children and adults at a busy playground with climbing structures and ladders, capturing a lively historical scene

/ Alamy Stock Photo

This is from New York City’s Tompkins Square Park. Ladders and poles, folks, get yer ladders and poles.

8.This is what the Oval Office looks like completely empty:

The Oval Office without any furniture or books, just the empty built-in bookcases and the wood floor with a zigzag pattern

Getty Images

This was in 2001 while it was being renovated.

9.And here’s what it looks like with all that stuff back in it:

With flags, furniture, curtains, and rugs

Alex Wong / Getty Images

10.This is investor Walter Thornton trying to sell his car for $100 directly after the United States’ stock market crash in 1929:

Man in suit leans on a vintage car with a sign reading, "$100 will buy this car. Must have cash. Lost all on the stock market."

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

Thornton actually ran a successful modeling agency after all this.

11.This is the Thanksgiving menu that was served at the Plaza Hotel in 1899:

Plaza Hotel Thanksgiving menu

What are you going for? Might be partridge and orange jelly tarts for me.

12.Huntington Beach in California used to have a bunch of oil derricks on top of it:

People enjoy a busy Huntington Beach, California, in a vintage photo with many oil derricks visible in the background

Photo courtesy Orange County Archives

They were there until the ’80s.

13.This is what a float from the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade looked like in the 1930s:

Uncle Sam balloon floats above a parade with historical buildings in the background, surrounded by crowds and smaller balloons

New York Daily News Archive / NY Daily News via Getty Images

Uncle Sam seems OVER it.

14.Before it found its home in New York Harbor, the Statue of Liberty’s head was on display at the 1878 Paris World’s Fair:

The Statue of Liberty's head and torch arm on display in a park during construction, surrounded by trees and benches

Fpg / Getty Images

And here’s what Lady Lib looked like while it was being packed up to be shipped to the US:

The Statue of Liberty under construction, surrounded by scaffolding, with nearby buildings in a city setting

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

How much do you think shipping cost on that?

15.Recognize these big ol’ rocks? This is Mount Rushmore before the presidential heads were carved into it:

Close-up of Mount Rushmore sans faces

FPG / Getty Images

Construction on Mount Rushmore started in 1927 and was finished in 1941.

16.This is Lemuel Cook, maybe the oldest living veteran of the American Revolutionary War, photographed in the mid-1800s:

An elderly man with thinning hair and a solemn expression wearing a dark coat

Alamy Stock Photo

This guy literally saw the British coming. Respect.

17.This is the foldout bed George Washington slept on during the Revolutionary War:

A thin, stained mattress the size of a twin-size bed and a pillow coming out of a trunk

You’ll notice it folds into a trunk. Only the finest for old George.

18.This is what Franklin Delano Roosevelt looked like at the start of his first term as President in 1933…

A person in a suit seated at a desk with papers and a microphone in front of them

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

And this is the last picture of Franklin Delano Roosevelt ever taken, snapped just one day before his death:

An older man in a suit and tie sits in a chair in a room with bookshelves and a framed picture

Glasshouse Photos / Alamy Stock Photo

He was 63 years old in this picture.

19.This is how football helmets were tested in the early 1950s:

A man with eyes closed wears a metal helmet, facing a hanging object. Early experiment likely related to motion or sound perception study

/ Alamy Stock Photo

Can’t say I’d be too pleased about this job.

20.This was the scene aboard the ship The Queen Elizabeth as it brought soldiers back home to New York after World War II ended:

A historical photo of a ship's deck crowded with passengers

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

21.One panel of glass survived the World Trade Center attacks on 9/11. This is it:

A panel of glass from 9/11 in a museum display

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22.This is what the FBI’s fingerprint files looked like in 1942:

People and many stacks of small drawers in a large, cavernous room

Alamy Stock Photo

Endless.

23.This is Charles Ponzi, the infamous scammer ponzi schemes got their name from:

Charles Ponzi

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

He was actually born in Italy.

24.This picture was taken shortly after David Scott and Neil Armstrong’s Gemini 8 space capsule landed in the Pacific Ocean:

Astronauts on a floating spacecraft hatch in the ocean after splashdown recovery

Interim Archives / Getty Images

Some cool-looking extra-terrestrial dudes.

25.Here’s the 1930 “Queen Of The Vineyards” Wilma Smith buried head to toe in a bunch of grapes:

Woman's smiling face surrounded by large pile of grapes, appearing as if submerged in them

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

Congrats, Wilma.

26.This is the first aerial photo ever taken, captured by James Wallace Black from a hot-air balloon high above Boston:

Overhead shot of many low-rise buildings

Alamy Stock Photo

This picture, from 1860, is called “Boston, as the Eagle and the Wild Goose See It.”

27.This is what a ticket to the opening day of Disneyland looked like:

Person holding vintage Disneyland ticket book with admission and adventures coupons, showcasing nostalgic theme park memorabilia

MediaNews Group/Orange County Re / MediaNews Group via Getty Images

$4.75… bit too rich for my blood.

28.Over 80,000 people attended the 1921 heavyweight championship boxing match between Georges Carpentier and Jack Dempsey:

Aerial view of a crowded stadium centered on a boxing ring, filled with spectators, creating a sea of hats in a historical black-and-white photograph

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

It was held at a place called Boyle’s Thirty Acres in Jersey City, New Jersey. Dempsey won.

29.This is the Dale Creek Bridge, an bridge built in Wyoming in the 1800s that was so rickety that trains had to slow down to 4 miles per hour to cross it safely:

Old photograph of a steam train crossing a high trestle bridge over rocky terrain

Graphicaartis / Getty Images

No thanks!

30.In 1964, Randy Gardner, pictured here, set the world record for the longest time without sleeping after staying awake 264 hours:

A young man looking remarkably alert sits on a bed with a clock, light bulb, and other items on it

Don Cravens / Getty Images

Those items next to him are objects he would identify throughout the experiment to show he was still lucid.

31.This is the 107th US Colored Infantry, pictured here in 1865:

Historic photo of soldiers from the Civil War era posing in uniform, holding rifles in front of a rustic wooden building

Historical / Corbis via Getty Images

32.This is the top hat Abraham Lincoln was wearing the night he was assassinated:

Abe Lincoln's top hat

Related: 101 People Who Woke Up One Morning And Promptly Had The Most Painfully Awkward And Embarrassing Day In Human History

33.This is what an authentic, mint condition Woodstock 1969 ticket looks like:

The ticket shows it was for three days and cost $18; it has been sealed in an appraiser container and rated as gem mint 10

$6!

34.This is Althea Gibson, the first Black American to win a tennis Grand Slam title, celebrating at a parade honoring her:

Woman in elegant dress blows kisses from a convertible during a crowded street parade; man in suit sits beside her

New York Daily News Archive / NY Daily News via Getty Images

She won the French Open in 1956 and later won at Wimbledon and at the US Open.

35.This is what in-flight entertainment looked like in the 1960s:

tvs on top where overhead bags go present-day

Avalon / Getty Images

My neck hurts just looking at this.

36.This is a picture from Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. Can you spot Abe?

A black-and-white photo of a crowd, with many in it wearing top hats, with a man who appears to be Abe without a hat on the top right

Library of Congress / Getty Images

I assure you, he’s there.

37.The picture, from 1930, shows what the Empire State Building looked like while it was under construction:

Black-and-white photo of the building with the top floors with scaffolding

Bettmann

It opened in 1931.

38.This is how long it took to travel to different parts of the United States in 1800:

Map showing 1800 travel times from New York with isochronic lines for weeks to destinations

Six weeks to Illinois!

39.This is the aftermath of the Great Molasses Flood of 1919, a deadly event that claimed the lives of 21 people in Boston after a container holding over two million gallons of molasses burst, sending a wave of molasses several feet high through the city streets:

Crowd and vehicles gather at a waterfront disaster site with debris and collapsed structures spread across the area

Science History Images / Alamy Stock Photo

It sounds like it’s funny, but I assure you: it is not.

40.This is what the cabin of a passenger plane looked like in the 1930s:

Interior of an old train carriage with rows of wooden seats and overhead luggage racks

Topical Press Agency / Getty Images

This is the interior of a Handley Page Type W plane.

41.This is a picture of the construction workers who built the Chase Manhattan Bank posing with their work:

Workers line the decks of a multi-level shipyard during construction

Keystone / Getty Images

This is what they did before Happy Hour.

42.This is what the grave site of President James Monroe looks like:

Gothic-style outdoor memorial structure with an American flag and wreath at its base

Ricky Kresslein / Getty Images

It’s in Richmond.

43.This map, from 1507, is the first map to ever label America as “America”:

An old map

Heritage Images / Heritage Images/Getty Images

As you probably now, it was named in honor of Amerigo Vespucci and was “the first map to depict clearly a separate Western Hemisphere, with the Pacific as a separate ocean.”

44.This is what the control panel of the Spirit of Saint Louis, the plane Charles Lindbergh used on his historic flight across the Atlantic Ocean, looked like:

Close-up of vintage machinery with numbered parts, possibly for maintenance or instructional purposes

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

And this is the chair Charles Lindbergh sat on for his entire 33 hour flight:

Worn-out wicker chair with a torn black seat, set in a rustic room with vintage objects

While we’re at it, here’s a diagram of his entire plane, for reference:

Diagram of the Ryan N-X-211 aircraft with labeled parts and specifications

Bettmann / Bettmann Archive

Looks… comfy!

45.Before modern car washes were invented, one particularly wacky idea was for cars to drive around through water in a circle:

Vintage cars driving through circular water-filled channels at the Auto Wash Bowl, an early car wash facility featuring automatic water jets

Underwood Archives / Getty Images

It cost 25 cents but you can safely assume the memories lasted a lifetime.

46.This is Emma Lilian Todd, the first woman to design an airplane:

Emma Lilian Todd

Science History Images / Alamy Stock Photo

That is some contraption.

47.This is a picture of a meeting of the New York chapter of the “Fat Men’s Club” circa 1930:

Group of well-dressed men from the early 20th century gather indoors. Some smile, and one wears a hat. The setting suggests a formal event

General Photographic Agency / Getty Images

According to the photo’s caption, pictured here are “A Rockwitz (312lbs), comedian Eddie Carvey (250lbs), David Burns (475lbs) and F C Kupper (351lbs).” Members had to be at least 200 pounds to join.

48.Here is the oldest picture of the White House ever taken:

The White House

Alamy Stock Photo

It was taken in 1846. Right around the time when the sewage was probably killing everyone inside.

49.This is Civil War veteran Jacob Miller, a man who was shot right between the eyes and lived for 17 more years:

An elderly man with a long white beard, wearing a suit with a star-shaped medal pinned to his chest. Unknown identity

/ Alamy Stock Photo

That can’t feel good.

50.Thomas Edison’s last breath was captured and now resides in a museum:

"Edison's Last Breath" display with a test tube: "During Edison's final illness,  a rack of test tubes was close to his bedside; upon his death, Edison's son Charles had them sealed with paraffin wax"

Interesting.

51.One of the biggest fads of the 1950s was “phonebooth stuffing,” where-in a bunch of people would, well, stuff themselves into a phonebooth:

A large group of men, many dressed similarly, are attempting to fit inside a telephone booth while onlookers watch and laugh in the background

/ Alamy Stock Photo

The world record at the time was 25 people stuffed into a phone booth. Truly an example of the triumph of the human spirit.

52.These are the prices from a 107 years ago from a restaurant in Alabama:

Framed menu with vintage prices for food items like hot dogs, pies, and drinks from a place named Chris' Place at 118 Dexter Ave

Lemme get the uh… pigs feet and orange juice.

53.This is what New York City looked like from space on 9/11/2001:

A satellite view of a densely populated cityscape surrounded by water, with visible land, rivers, and coastlines

NASA

Captured from the ISS.

54.This is what the dorm room of two college students looked like in the 1910s:

Two men seated on a bed in a decorated room with framed pictures. They are wearing formal suits

Alamy Stock Photo

BFFs.

55.The Capitol lawn was mowed by a steam-powered lawnmower way back in 1903:

A man mowing the Capitol lawn

Library Of Congress / Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

Yet another thing I just find neat.

56.This is what some of the first New York City tour buses looked like in 1904:

An old NYC tour bus

Universal History Archive / Contributor

No walls…no seatbelts…just vibes.

57.In 1984, a giant dinosaur replica was moved via a helicopter to the Boston Museum of Science:

Helicopter transports a large dinosaur model over a city skyline in a dramatic aerial scene

Medianews Group / MediaNews Group via Getty Images

Never thought you’d see a dinosaur being airlifted, did you?

58.This is what a traffic light looked like in New York City in 1929:

Vintage photograph of New York City's 5th Avenue with a tall clock structure in the center of the street. The street is bustling with people and old cars

/ Alamy Stock Photo

Even traffic lights were art back in the day, back in the day being 1929, of course.

59.This is Louisa Ann Swain, the first American woman to ever vote in a general election:

An elderly woman in a historical outfit and lace bonnet sits holding a book. She wears a shawl draped over her shoulders

Alamy Stock Photo

The vote happened in 1870, five decades before the 19th Amendment granted voting rights to all American women.

60.This is apparently an eighth-grade test from 1912. Are you passing it?

The test is divided into sections for grammar, geography, physiology, and civil government

Feel free to describe the heart in the comments.

61.This is what the Panama canal looked like while under construction:

Historical photo of the Panama Canal under construction, showing large lock walls and construction equipment

/ Alamy Stock Photo

62.This is President Lyndon B. Johnson driving a Amphicar, a, well, amphibious car designed to operate on land and sea:

A vintage car is floating on water with three people inside, two men and a woman, enjoying a ride near the shore

/ Alamy Stock Photo

Imagine the spiders inside that thing.

63.Before he retired from baseball, the legendary Lou Gerhig auditioned for the role of Tarzan. They made him carry and a spear and everything:

Man in leopard print toga poses with a spear overhead, striking a triumphant pose

New York Daily News Archive / NY Daily News via Getty Images

Apparently, he didn’t get the job because of his “massive legs.”

64.In 1933, A.L. Kahn caught a 5,000-pound manta ray off the coast of Florida:

A man stands next to a huge manta ray

Alamy Stock Photo

And then he brought it to New Jersey, naturally.

65.And, finally, for two brief years, 1934-5, the United States issued a $100,000 bill with Woodrow Wilson’s big ol’ mug on it:

Certificate for $100,000 in gold with a portrait of Woodrow Wilson, flanked by ornate designs

Underwood Archives / Getty Images

It never circulated publicly but if it did I would use it to buy 100,000 Arizona iced teas.

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